November 28, 2024

John Harbaugh wife files for divorce after been abused by …

 

 

 

IN AN emotional message, the wife of former Ravens running back Ray Rice broke her silence Tuesday morning, one day after Rice’s contract was terminated and he was indefinitely suspended by the NFL.

Those events followed a graphic video surfacing in which Rice punched his then-fiancee, Janay Palmer, whom he later married and now has his last name.

The couple has been in counselling since the incident in February, which occurred at Revel Casino, which has since closed, in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

Here’s the full statement (her Instagram profile is private, but the Baltimore Sun has confirmed that the statement was intended to be made public):

 

The Ravens were due to have paid Rice $10 million over the next three years while the National Football League, which had only suspended him for two games over the matter based on prior evidence, now require any team wishing to hire him to obtain approval from NFL commissioner Roger Goodell.

The video brought home the brutality of Rice’s assault and in its aftermath, Nike dropped its endorsement contract with the 27-year-old running back and EA Sports said it would remove him from the player pool of its NFL video game.

Rice jerseys were pulled from the NFL’s online store and the Ravens announced Tuesday they would allow fans to exchange Rice jerseys for those of another player.

“I don’t think he will play another NFL game,” New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft told CBS. “I’d be shocked if some team picked him up.”

Rice, who helped the Ravens win the 2013 Super Bowl, spoke briefly with ESPN.

“I have to be strong for my wife. She is so strong,” he said. “We are in good spirits. We have a lot of people praying for us and we will continue to support each other.

“I have to be there for (Janay) and my family right now and work through this.”

Celebrity website TMZ had previously shown a video of Rice dragging his unconscious wife out of a lift at the now-closed Revel casino in Atlantic City, prompting a two-game ban that was roundly criticised as insufficient.

Goodell later admitted he had erred with the two-game ban, and subsequently announced tougher punishments for domestic violence, including a six-game ban for a first incident and potential life bans for repeat offenders.

After TMZ reported Tuesday that no one from the NFL asked the casino for the video that was given to police and became public Monday, the league released a statement repeating that no one from the NFL had seen the video until TMZ released it.

“We requested from law enforcement any and all information about the incident, including any video that may exist,” the NFL said.

“That video was not made available to us and no one in our office saw it until yesterday.”

A state official in New Jersey told ABC News that providing the video to the NFL would have been illegal given the charges that had been filed against Rice over the matter.

Rice was arrested after the incident and charged with domestic violence assault, but avoided prosecution by entering into a pre-trial intervention program.

Rice apologised for his actions in May and again in July, when pre-season workouts began, saying his actions were “totally inexcusable.”

The Ravens also said they had not seen the video until Monday, coach John Harbaugh adding, “It changed things.”

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